Message from @ThisIsChris

Discord ID: 456109693597646849


2018-06-03 22:37:45 UTC  

Idk, try researching if sheiko had written anything about it or other great strength coaches

2018-06-03 23:52:03 UTC  

Sheiko probably has something

2018-06-03 23:52:09 UTC  

But it might be in russian

2018-06-09 12:51:30 UTC  

Awesome vid. Those guys put out quality content

2018-06-10 13:46:54 UTC  

Finally hit 315 deadlift again after a disc herniation in december. Always keep pushing forward guys.

2018-06-10 15:26:48 UTC  

Ouch, good job

2018-06-10 17:00:01 UTC  

Nice work @Steve - NJ

2018-06-10 23:35:05 UTC  

Nice job dude

2018-06-11 12:03:10 UTC  

Just need to get back to 405, but need to take it slow this time

2018-06-11 17:55:40 UTC  

Nice dude. How long do you think that will take? I am at about 315 DL too

2018-06-11 18:54:24 UTC  

Before i hurt my back it took about a month of just doing mainly squats, DL, etc to jump from 315 to 405

2018-06-11 18:55:58 UTC  

Will prob take around two months max just cant be stupid this time since youre never 100% after a disc herniation

2018-06-11 18:56:52 UTC  

I also ate a lot more than I usually do when I was lifting last winter

2018-06-11 19:11:55 UTC  

Dude that is some pretty fast gains

2018-06-11 19:12:22 UTC  

How many times a week were you deadlifting and squatting

2018-06-11 19:24:38 UTC  

I only think my gains were so fast was because of how much I ate and the fact that I've lifted for 8+ years but stuck mostly to isolation excercises until getting into DL's and squats

2018-06-11 19:26:02 UTC  

But i only did deadlifts once a week, just would do around 6 sets of squat and deadlift whenever i went to the gym

2018-06-11 19:32:26 UTC  

Ate rice and chicken/steak almost every night lol

2018-06-11 19:49:02 UTC  

@Steve - NJ man I'm sorry about your disc hernia 🙏 , good work getting back up

2018-06-11 20:28:41 UTC  

Thanks!

2018-06-12 14:57:05 UTC  

Feeling sore from my workout Sunday. I haven't felt sore like this since I started properly lifting, it feels more like when I was in college and just tired myself out in the gym because I didn't know what I was doing. I know the reason is that I didn't warm up enough for doing the Press. (I went straight from empty bar to work sets.)

2018-06-12 15:54:07 UTC  

@ThisIsChris Even you're not easing muscle soreness with Dr. Teal's epsom salts, are you even white?

2018-06-12 17:32:11 UTC  

@Deleted User do those work? I thought they were a meme!

2018-06-12 17:44:03 UTC  

@ThisIsChris I live in the brother. They’re great

2018-06-12 22:27:34 UTC  

@ThisIsChris Whenever you have slow or hard eccentric contractions, that can lead to soreness. I was deadlifting and let the bar down slower than I usually do and was much more sore than usual.

2018-06-13 17:42:03 UTC  

big if true

2018-06-13 17:44:34 UTC  

lol

2018-06-13 17:44:39 UTC  

love /fit

2018-06-17 23:47:16 UTC  

I have recently started working out with a co worker. When we hit the weights he can put lift me by a sizable amount on all of the big lifts. But when it comes to doing things in a practical sense at work I can out do him every time. What can you make of this? Does it make any sense that I am now feeling like it is in my head why I can’t lift heavier weights or just making me feel like there is definitely something going on. Or am I reading more into this than I should because it is two different things?

2018-06-18 00:14:44 UTC  

@JesseJames there is a recorded difference between lifting strength and applied strength

2018-06-18 00:21:42 UTC  

While it's true that doing lifts, especially your core exercises, will improve overall strength in large amounts of areas (Deadlifts hitting you glutes, hamstrings, quads, lumbar, etc), this doesn't always translate into practical use in physical labor. Also, take in effect that possibly the man just doesn't have the endurance as you do.

2018-06-18 00:23:50 UTC  

Training in the gym will make you stronger than Joe Blow, but in terms of applied strength, especially in a manual labour environment, it comes down to a russian concept called "strength-skill", of which the basic tenet is that you will become stronger at a movement the more you practice it and your central nervous system will become more adapted to those types of activities

2018-06-18 00:25:05 UTC  

I think it's really broad of a question

2018-06-18 00:25:23 UTC  

I don't know what lifts y'all are doing

2018-06-18 00:25:30 UTC  

nor your work tasks

2018-06-18 00:25:55 UTC  

Not a lifter

2018-06-18 00:35:58 UTC  

Like for example I would probably be stronger than an average lumberjack, but I guarantee the man could cut down a tree with an axe quicker than myself

2018-06-18 00:36:20 UTC  

(Although my family were loggers, and I've spent my fair share of times cutting down trees myself)

2018-06-18 01:17:52 UTC  

Hmm a lot of good info here. It makes a lot of sense. We’re doing dead lifts squats bench curls all of the typical lifts. He can out lift me by a pretty fair amount he is also much bigger than I am. But when at work doing physical labor that requires lifting pushing pulling prying etc I appear much stronger than he is and often have to help him accomplish tasks.